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Showing posts with label Somalia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Somalia. Show all posts

Saturday, July 30, 2011

All south Somalia slipping into famine - U.N., Posted by Meosha Eaton


LIBOI, Kenya, July 29 - The whole of drought- and conflict-wracked southern Somalia is heading into famine as the Horn of Africa food crisis deepens, the United Nations said on Friday.

In a report for countries sending aid, the U.N.'s umbrella humanitarian agency OCHA said the "crisis in southern Somalia is expected to continue to worsen through 2011, with all areas of the south slipping into famine."

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Somali refugee camps not coping, Posted by Meosha Eaton



Struggling through parched bush and baking heat, Rahmo Mohammed brought her severely malnourished son Saeed to Ethiopia's Kobe refugee camp to save him. That was three weeks ago, and he is still not better, his frail body too sick to accept medicine.

“He's getting worse. I would like to get him more medicine,” his mother said sadly. “Even when they give him medicine, he will not take it.”

U.N. Warns of Famine in East Africa , Posted by Meosha Eaton

The threat of famine and starvation is raising it's ugly head for the first time in this part of Africa for half a century. There were some pretty harrowing images on the BBC News last night which put the Murdoch farrago into tawdry perspective.

Quote:
UN declares Somalia famine in Bakool and Lower Shabelle
   A young boy rests on a hospital bed in a paediatric ward adjacent to the Ifo refugee camp which makes up part of the giant Dadaab refugee settlement on July 19, 2011 in Dadaab, Kenya height=261
An estimated 10 million people have been affected by the drought in east Africa.  The United Nations has declared a famine in two areas of southern Somalia as it suffers the worst drought in more than half a century.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Somali pirates free German ship after ransom paid, Posted by Meosha Eaton


* Cargo ship, 10 crew released; $5.7 million ransom claimed

* Expert says payment made in Kenya, ship heads to Djibouti

By Abdiqani Hassan

BOSASSO, Somalia, June 17 (Reuters) - Somali pirates have freed a German-owned cargo ship, seized in April, after they received a ransom, a pirate and maritime source said on Friday.

The Antigua and Barbuda-flagged Susan K, and with its crew of 10 Ukrainians and Filipinos, was released on Thursday.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

MACTV News: UN halts food handout in Ethiopia region after ambush, Posted by Menelik

 

May 18, 2011 3:20:48 PM


* Government, ONLF rebels blame each other

* Somali Region ravaged by drought, facing food crisis


By Aaron Maasho
ADDIS ABABA, May 18 (Reuters) - The United Nations has suspended food distribution in Ethiopia's drought-stricken Somali Region after gunmen killed one UN worker and injured another in an ambush on a U.N. convoy last week.

The ethnic Somali province, more commonly known as the Ogaden, is home to a low-key insurgency led by the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), which has fought for independence since 1984.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Uganda election war of words stokes violence fears, Posted by Meosha Eaton

As reported by Reuters:

* Opposition will appeal to "court of public opinion"
* Public protests inspired by Egypt a possibility
* U.S opinions held in no esteem by opposition


By Barry Malone
KAMPALA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - A war of words between Uganda's main presidential candidates escalated on Friday, sparking fears of Egypt-style street violence should the opposition say the poll was rigged.

Uganda's main opposition leader, Kizza Besigye, repeated a warning he made to Reuters last week that Ugandans may overthrow long-standing President Yoweri Museveni with mass public protests if a Feb. 18 poll is not fair.

The once close ally of Museveni elaborated on Friday, saying he would appeal to the public and not to the Supreme Court if he suspected foul play.

"The struggle for change is not mine alone. It belongs to all our supporters across the country," Besigye told a news conference in the capital Kampala.

"If our victory is stolen, it is to the court of public opinion that I will appeal."
Besigye told journalists Uganda had become a "ruthless dictatorship."
Government spokespeople were unavailable to comment.

The 2001 and 2006 polls were judged flawed by the Supreme Court but it upheld Museveni's win, saying that irregularities were not substantial enough to affect the overall result.

Museveni threatened twice in the last month to have Besigye arrested for alleging he had sold Lake Victoria to foreigners. Besigye was arrested during the last elections on charges of rape and treason.

"Besigye may find himself in prison over peddling lies. Election laws don't allow this," Museveni said. "Even if he wins an election based on such lies, the results can be cancelled especially if there is evidence to this effect presented to court."


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Museveni is respected internationally for his shepherding of the economy, for stabilising a once chaotic country and for intervening in regional hotspots such as Somalia. Critics say he marries that with domestic repression.

Besigye said the situation in Uganda could not be compared directly to Tunisia or Egypt but that conditions were similarly ripe for public protest.
"But if the question is whether I would support a popular protest against an illegitimate decision of an election? Certainly," he said.

Both Besigye and Museveni on Friday met with the United States' top diplomat for Africa, Johnny Carson.

U.S. diplomatic cables, published in December by WikiLeaks, said the opposition were "fractured and politically immature" and that it was "by no means clear (they) would improve governance in Uganda in any way".

Besigye dismissed U.S. opinion of one of its key allies in East Africa. Museveni's troops make up the bulk of an African Union peacekeeping force that is the only thing protecting Somalia's besieged government from falling to Islamist rebels.

"It's their perfect right to form whatever opinion they form, whether it's uncomplimentary to me or to our leadership," Besigye said.

"But I am keenly aware the U.S. has made very many grave mistakes in their judgments, so I exercise my right to choose how I esteem their judgment."

(Editing by George Obulutsa and Philippa Fletcher)